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MacGruber
hehehehe

Registered: 06/22/09
Posts: 80
Last seen: 10 years, 4 months
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Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees
#18972539 - 10/13/13 03:16 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Help me figure out the species. They don't have red gills, and aren't staining blue, so I'm confident they're not dangerous. I'm still not totally sure on the species though.
Slippery Jacks?
EDIT: Here's the album link
http://imgur.com/a/YZXY5
Edited by MacGruber (10/14/13 06:07 PM)
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Untitled
Stranger

Registered: 10/13/12
Posts: 1,333
Loc: England
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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: MacGruber]
#18972671 - 10/13/13 03:47 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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It's impossible to say what they are without pics! There are so many species that don't bruise blue and have red pores.
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canid
irregular meat sprocket




Registered: 02/26/02
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Loc: looking for zeebras, n. c...
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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: Untitled]
#18972692 - 10/13/13 03:51 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Specifically within Boletus, some of the red pored species are toxic.
I'm afraid I couldn't tell which Boletale these are either, but I would agree with Suillus for the genus.
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Attn PWN hunters: If you should come across a bluing Psilocybe matching P. pellicolusa please smell it. If you detect a scent reminiscent of Anethole (anise) please preserve a specimen or two for study and please PM me.
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MycoMen
Stranger things have happened
Registered: 11/19/12
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Loc: WA
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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: canid]
#18972722 - 10/13/13 03:56 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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^what these guys said. Post pictures, no way to tell without those.
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canid
irregular meat sprocket




Registered: 02/26/02
Posts: 11,912
Loc: looking for zeebras, n. c...
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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: MycoMen]
#18972755 - 10/13/13 04:01 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Quote:
MycoMen said: ^what these guys said. Post pictures, no way to tell without those.
There's a picture there, it's just not loading poperly, and aparently it's not just me.
If I stop the page loading, or let it time out, I get a broken image icon which I can open in a new tab.
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Attn PWN hunters: If you should come across a bluing Psilocybe matching P. pellicolusa please smell it. If you detect a scent reminiscent of Anethole (anise) please preserve a specimen or two for study and please PM me.
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MycoMen
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Registered: 11/19/12
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Loc: WA
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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: MacGruber]
#18972820 - 10/13/13 04:14 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Thanks, got it by trying to quote OP: http://imgur.com/a/YZXY5
And yeah, definitely Suillus, probably Suillus luteus. Remove pores and cap surface before cooking, it's gonna be a lot less slimy that way.
The ones at the bottom are a Lycoperdon sp. (probably L. perlatum), which is the better edible if they're still totally white inside.
Edited by MycoMen (10/13/13 04:20 PM)
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BittrBuffalo
Deaconica

Registered: 05/19/13
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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: MycoMen]
#18973213 - 10/13/13 05:39 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Definitely Suillus sp. 
Stems are a little short to be S. luteus. I'd agree with S. brevipes (Slippery Jack), it doesn't look like there are very noticeable glandular dots on the stem. Anyway, yes edible. Remove the pores and slime like Myco said. It's probably going to work better in a soup or sauce than just fried up. I've never eaten one myself, but I hear they're not anything to write home about. Let us know if/when you decide to cook it up.
-------------------- Disclaimer: This post is a work of fiction, provided for entertainment purposes only. Any resemblance to actual persons or events, past or present, is strictly coincidental. All celebrity voices are impersonated. If you begin your ID request with, "I just ate a bunch of these mushrooms…should I not have done that?" I'm just gonna sit back and watch Darwin at work.
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MycoMen
Stranger things have happened
Registered: 11/19/12
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Loc: WA
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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: BittrBuffalo]
#18973255 - 10/13/13 05:49 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Quote:
BittrBuffalo said: Definitely Suillus sp. 
Stems are a little short to be S. luteus. I'd agree with S. brevipes (Slippery Jack)
S. brevipes doesn't have a veil. Some of these actually do look like brevipes though, OP might have both species here.
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Alan Rockefeller
Mycologist

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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: BittrBuffalo]
#18973260 - 10/13/13 05:50 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Not Suillus brevipes due to the annulus. I don't think S. luteus grows on the west coast. Consider Suillus caerulescens since I think I see a couple douglas fir needles stuck to the cap. Check for blue staining, it may not be super obvious. If that does not work, try the Suillus key on mushroomexpert.com, or go through the suillus species on mykoweb and consider the ones that have an annulus.
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MycoMen
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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: Alan Rockefeller]
#18973291 - 10/13/13 05:56 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Quote:
Alan Rockefeller said: I don't think S. luteus grows on the west coast.
I find it occasionally in the South Puget Sound area, though don't usually bother taking any. McKenny/Stuntz/Ammirati p. 20 list it, though "not as common as the other slippery jacks."
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Alan Rockefeller
Mycologist

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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: MycoMen]
#18973303 - 10/13/13 06:00 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Never seen it in California, but there are a lot of pnw species that do not make it that far south. I see it in Mexico occasionally.
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pseudotsuga


Registered: 06/29/11
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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: MycoMen]
#18973316 - 10/13/13 06:06 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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I also agree we suillus luteus here on the west coast. Darvin Deshazer's observation observation and my own.
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BittrBuffalo
Deaconica

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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: pseudotsuga]
#18973530 - 10/13/13 07:05 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Oops, maybe I was thinking of S. pseudobrevipes. 
I don't know how common it is, though.
-------------------- Disclaimer: This post is a work of fiction, provided for entertainment purposes only. Any resemblance to actual persons or events, past or present, is strictly coincidental. All celebrity voices are impersonated. If you begin your ID request with, "I just ate a bunch of these mushrooms…should I not have done that?" I'm just gonna sit back and watch Darwin at work.
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BittrBuffalo
Deaconica

Registered: 05/19/13
Posts: 1,729
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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: BittrBuffalo]
#18973565 - 10/13/13 07:19 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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It probably is S. luteus. I don't see the glandular dots in the picture, and the shortness fooled me. But those are pretty bitchin' rings right there.
-------------------- Disclaimer: This post is a work of fiction, provided for entertainment purposes only. Any resemblance to actual persons or events, past or present, is strictly coincidental. All celebrity voices are impersonated. If you begin your ID request with, "I just ate a bunch of these mushrooms…should I not have done that?" I'm just gonna sit back and watch Darwin at work.
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MacGruber
hehehehe

Registered: 06/22/09
Posts: 80
Last seen: 10 years, 4 months
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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: BittrBuffalo]
#18977743 - 10/14/13 06:11 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Thanks guys!
I cooked up the freshest ones in olive oil and garlic and they were quite nice. Very mild (I tasted the other stuff more than the mushrooms), but quite pleasant. We added it to a marinara pasta sauce and it was great.
Anyone know what the puffballs are in the last pic?
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MycoMen
Stranger things have happened
Registered: 11/19/12
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Loc: WA
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Re: Portland, OR Bolete ID- yellow/brown near pine trees [Re: MacGruber]
#18978727 - 10/14/13 09:12 PM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Lycoperdon perlatum. Excellent as long as the inside is still totally white.
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